Synthesis of high-performance polycrystalline metal–organic framework membranes at room temperature in a few minutes†
Abstract
The development of a rapid and reproducible crystallization route for the synthesis of polycrystalline metal–organic framework (MOF) films is attractive for the scalable production of nanoporous membranes on porous supports. Prior crystallization studies have primarily focused on heterogeneous nucleation, and consequently, the time-consuming growth step has been overlooked. Here, we report a crystallization using sustained precursors (CUSP) route that maintains a high precursor concentration in the growth step, hindering the undesired Ostwald ripening observed in the late stage of growth. As a result, well-intergrown polycrystalline MOF films hosting a uniform grain size and a thickness of a few hundred nanometers could be obtained at room temperature in just a few minutes. Attractive gas separation performance is obtained from ZIF-8 membranes grown in 8 min with H2/C3H8 selectivity of 2433 and C3H6/C3H8 selectivity of 30. The versatility of this approach is demonstrated by synthesizing a ZIF-67 membrane, as well as for the first time, a sub-1 μm-thick continuously intergrown ZIF-90 membrane, also in a few minutes, yielding H2/CH4 and H2/C3H6 selectivities of 19.2 and 107.1, respectively. Such advances are expected to bring the scalable production of the high-performance polycrystalline MOF membranes a step closer to reality.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Journal of Materials Chemistry A HOT Papers and 2020 Journal of Materials Chemistry A most popular articles